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Dive into the research topics where Francesco Casola is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesco Casola.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Nanoscale NMR spectroscopy and imaging of multiple nuclear species

Stephen DeVience; Linh Pham; Igor Lovchinsky; Alexander Sushkov; Nir Bar-Gill; Chinmay Belthangady; Francesco Casola; Madeleine Corbett; Huiliang Zhang; Mikhail D. Lukin; Hongkun Park; Amir Yacoby; Ronald L. Walsworth

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provide non-invasive information about multiple nuclear species in bulk matter, with wide-ranging applications from basic physics and chemistry to biomedical imaging. However, the spatial resolution of conventional NMR and MRI is limited to several micrometres even at large magnetic fields (>1 T), which is inadequate for many frontier scientific applications such as single-molecule NMR spectroscopy and in vivo MRI of individual biological cells. A promising approach for nanoscale NMR and MRI exploits optical measurements of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) colour centres in diamond, which provide a combination of magnetic field sensitivity and nanoscale spatial resolution unmatched by any existing technology, while operating under ambient conditions in a robust, solid-state system. Recently, single, shallow NV centres were used to demonstrate NMR of nanoscale ensembles of proton spins, consisting of a statistical polarization equivalent to ∼100-1,000 spins in uniform samples covering the surface of a bulk diamond chip. Here, we realize nanoscale NMR spectroscopy and MRI of multiple nuclear species ((1)H, (19)F, (31)P) in non-uniform (spatially structured) samples under ambient conditions and at moderate magnetic fields (∼20 mT) using two complementary sensor modalities.


Nature Communications | 2015

Nanometre-scale probing of spin waves using single electron spins

Toeno van der Sar; Francesco Casola; Ronald L. Walsworth; Amir Yacoby

Pushing the frontiers of condensed-matter magnetism requires the development of tools that provide real-space, few-nanometre-scale probing of correlated-electron magnetic excitations under ambient conditions. Here we present a practical approach to meet this challenge, using magnetometry based on single nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond. We focus on spin-wave excitations in a ferromagnetic microdisc, and demonstrate local, quantitative and phase-sensitive detection of the spin-wave magnetic field at ∼50 nm from the disc. We map the magnetic-field dependence of spin-wave excitations by detecting the associated local reduction in the discs longitudinal magnetization. In addition, we characterize the spin–noise spectrum by nitrogen-vacancy spin relaxometry, finding excellent agreement with a general analytical description of the stray fields produced by spin–spin correlations in a 2D magnetic system. These complementary measurement modalities pave the way towards imaging the local excitations of systems such as ferromagnets and antiferromagnets, skyrmions, atomically assembled quantum magnets, and spin ice.


Science | 2017

Control and local measurement of the spin chemical potential in a magnetic insulator

Chunhui Du; Toeno van der Sar; Tony X. Zhou; Pramey Upadhyaya; Francesco Casola; Huiliang Zhang; Mehmet C. Onbasli; Caroline A. Ross; Ronald L. Walsworth; Yaroslav Tserkovnyak; Amir Yacoby

Diamonds to the rescue Keeping track of spin transport inside a spintronic device is challenging. Du et al. came up with a method involving diamond nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers, which can act like tiny, very sensitive magnetometers. The authors placed diamond nanobeams containing the NV centers in close proximity to the sample. This allowed them to measure the spin chemical potential of spin waves—so-called magnons—with nanometer resolution in the material yttrium iron garnet. Because NV centers are also sensitive to temperature, the method may be of use in spin caloritronics. Science, this issue p. 195 Nanometer spatial resolution measurement is achieved using nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond. The spin chemical potential characterizes the tendency of spins to diffuse. Probing this quantity could provide insight into materials such as magnetic insulators and spin liquids and aid optimization of spintronic devices. Here we introduce single-spin magnetometry as a generic platform for nonperturbative, nanoscale characterization of spin chemical potentials. We experimentally realize this platform using diamond nitrogen-vacancy centers and use it to investigate magnons in a magnetic insulator, finding that the magnon chemical potential can be controlled by driving the system’s ferromagnetic resonance. We introduce a symmetry-based two-fluid theory describing the underlying magnon processes, measure the local thermomagnonic torque, and illustrate the detection sensitivity using electrically controlled spin injection. Our results pave the way for nanoscale control and imaging of spin transport in mesoscopic systems.


Nature Reviews Materials | 2018

Probing condensed matter physics with magnetometry based on nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond

Francesco Casola; Toeno van der Sar; Amir Yacoby

The magnetic fields generated by spins and currents provide a unique window into the physics of correlated-electron materials and devices. Proposed only a decade ago, magnetometry based on the electron spin of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) defects in diamond is emerging as a platform that is excellently suited for probing condensed matter systems: it can be operated from cryogenic temperatures to above room temperature, has a dynamic range spanning from DC to GHz, and allows sensor-sample distances as small as a few nanometres. As such, NV magnetometry provides access to static and dynamic magnetic and electronic phenomena with nanoscale spatial resolution. Pioneering work focused on proof-of-principle demonstrations of its nanoscale imaging resolution and magnetic field sensitivity. Now, experiments are starting to probe the correlated-electron physics of magnets and superconductors and to explore the current distributions in low-dimensional materials. In this Review, we discuss the application of NV magnetometry to the exploration of condensed matter physics, focusing on its use to study static and dynamic magnetic textures, and static and dynamic current distributions.


Nature Communications | 2018

Magnetostatic twists in room-temperature skyrmions explored by nitrogen-vacancy center spin texture reconstruction

Y. Dovzhenko; Francesco Casola; Sarah Schlotter; Tony X. Zhou; Felix Büttner; Ronald L. Walsworth; Geoffrey S. D. Beach; Amir Yacoby

Magnetic skyrmions are two-dimensional non-collinear spin textures characterized by an integer topological number. Room-temperature skyrmions were recently found in magnetic multilayer stacks, where their stability was largely attributed to the interfacial Dzyaloshinskii–Moriya interaction. The strength of this interaction and its role in stabilizing the skyrmions is not yet well understood, and imaging of the full spin structure is needed to address this question. Here, we use a nitrogen-vacancy centre in diamond to measure a map of magnetic fields produced by a skyrmion in a magnetic multilayer under ambient conditions. We compute the manifold of candidate spin structures and select the physically meaningful solution. We find a Néel-type skyrmion whose chirality is not left-handed, contrary to preceding reports. We propose skyrmion tube-like structures whose chirality rotates through the film thickness. We show that NV magnetometry, combined with our analysis method, provides a unique tool to investigate this previously inaccessible phenomenon.The Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) is crucial to the stabilization of skyrmions but the contribution is not well understood. Here, the authors provide a methodology using the single electron spin of a nitrogen-vacancy center to image the fine structure of skyrmions which is attributed to the competition between the DMI and stray fields.


arXiv: Strongly Correlated Electrons | 2016

Imaging the Spin Texture of a Skyrmion Under Ambient Conditions Using an Atomic-Sized Sensor

Yuliya Dovzhenko; Francesco Casola; Sarah Schlotter; Tony X. Zhou; Felix Büttner; Ronald L. Walsworth; Geoffrey S. D. Beach; Amir Yacoby


Nature Communications | 2015

Erratum: Nanometre-scale probing of spin waves using single electron spins.

Toeno van der Sar; Francesco Casola; Ronald L. Walsworth; Amir Yacoby


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Nanoscale NMR Spectroscopy and Imaging of Multiple Nuclear Species

Linh Pham; Stephen DeVience; Nir Bar-Gill; Chinmay Belthangady; Francesco Casola; Madeleine Corbett; Huiliang Zhang; Paola Cappellaro; Mikhail D. Lukin; Hongkun Park; Amir Yacoby; Ronald L. Walsworth


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Spin-torque oscillation in a magnetic insulator probed by a single-spin sensor.

Huiliang Zhang; Mark Ku; Francesco Casola; Chunhui Du; T. van der Sar; Mehmet C. Onbasli; C. A. Ross; Yaroslav Tserkovnyak; Amir Yacoby; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Imaging hydrodynamic electron flow in graphene with nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond

Mark Ku; Qing Li; Jing Shi; Young Jae Shin; Huiliang Zhang; Francesco Casola; Philip Kim; Amir Yacoby; Ronald L. Walsworth

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Geoffrey S. D. Beach

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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